All our Work Consists in Action
St. Vincent was fond of the classic adage, “Totum opus nostrum in operatione consistit.” “All of our work consists in action.” Or, again, “All our works end up in action.” or, more loosely, “Action is our entire task.” This applies to everyone, especially leaders.
Claire Lew wrote, in Action is the Answer on the blog Signal v. Noise:
Itâs not what you say that mattersâââitâs what you do.
I observed the truth of this old adage, firsthand, about six years ago.
At the time, I wasnât CEO of Know Your Company. I was an employee at another company.
As an employee, I remember making a suggestion to our CEO about how we should market a new programâŠ
Iâll never forget how casually it was brushed aside.
I remember asking our CEO a question via email about a new idea I had, and if it was something heâd be open toâŠ
Iâll never forget that he never responded to my email.
I remember pitching a new approach to thinking about our website to our CEOâŠ
Iâll never forget how defensive he got about why things were the way things were.
The dismissal, inaction, and defensiveness said to me loud and clear: I donât want your feedback. I donât plan to do anything with it. We often forget as leaders how much our actions sayâââor donât say.
Suffice to say, I never spoke up and offered honest feedback after those instances, going forward. Studies have found that the biggest reason for why people donât speak up at work is because they believe it is futile. Employees donât think anything will happen with their feedback⊠so they donât give it.
I am living proof of that statistic.
If you want honest feedback, you must act on the feedback youâve gotten in some way. Prove to employees itâs worth their effort to be honest with you.
No matter how many specific questions you ask or how well you receive the feedback, what you do with that feedback will always carry more weight than anything else.
âLead by exampleâ or âLead from the frontâ are common sayings we like to read in management books and nod our heads to. But do we internalize and actively practice those sentiments enough?
If youâre wrestling with the questions of how to better retain your employees, how to improve your company culture, how to cultivate more honest feedback from your employeesâŠ
Action is the answer.
Substitute the word “members” or “confreres” or “sisters” for “employees”. Substitute CEO for President, or Superioress General, or Director General for CEO…. Think about it…
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